Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014)
Four movies in, at this point you can either fall back on the old criticisms of Michael Bay as a filmmaker or simply let down your guard and look for any simple pleasures offered by the Transformers franchise, a series mostly known for chaotic plotting and action. Age of Extinction is probably the best Transformers film since the first one (take that for what you will) but it still has all the hallmarks of the obtuse and convoluted plotting, absurd and obnoxious characters, juvenile humor, intense product placement, and often incoherent action. Gone are the characters from the first three films and in their stead is Mark Wahlberg (upgrade) as a Texan inventor named, get this, Cade Yeager. He and his teen daughter come into contact with Optimus Prime and are on the run from multiple forces. Apparently a bounty hunter is looking to target Prime. The U.S. has a black ops team tracking down Transformers in hiding. And Stanley Tucci plays a business tycoon who wants to make his own Transformers via their magic substance “Transformium.” Reading all of that, you realize the pieces still don’t really make sense, and that’s before the robot dinosaurs come into play. And yet Bay and his team have fine-tuned the entertaining aspects of the franchise and better consolidated them in the fourth film. A badass alien bounty hunter/collector is a great addition, adding the government as an adversary, Titus Welliver (TV’s Lost) as a cocksure special agent, Tucci as a corporate blowhard, and robot dinosaurs, it all sort of works on its own terms. Again, if you try and logically connect the pieces, it won’t happen. By this point, if you’re not a fan of the series, there’s no real reason to continue watching, but if you’ve found any semblance of enjoyment then there should be enough to keep your attention with the fourth film, robot dinosaurs and all.
Nate’s Grade: C+
Posted on January 11, 2015, in 2014 Movies and tagged action, aliens, kelsey grammar, mark wahlberg, michael bay, nicola peltz, robots, sci-fi, sequel, stanley tucci, t.j. miller. Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.




I was so excited for the Transformers to be made. And then they were made. And it was bad. Worse. Terrible. And now…I have no interest in watching the most recent abomination. How does Michael Bay still get work??? Oh, because he makes things lacking any substance but heavy with pretty CGI and actresses that cannot act but are as fake as the CGI that carries his work. Thanks, not for the review, but for sitting through this movie and surviving.
Stupid, loud and crazy. Pretty much like every other Michael Bay movie. Except, this one actually began to get on my nerves. Good review Nate.